Showing posts with label Indian Point. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Indian Point. Show all posts

Sunday, April 12, 2015

Indian Point - March 7, 2015

Located a few miles east of Cascade Locks, Indian Point is a promontory sticking out into the Gorge above I-84. The hike begins at the Herman Creek Trailhead and gains 2,700 vertical feet over a seven mile loop. Although the path rises almost a half mile from trailhead to summit, the incline is evenly spaced out throughout the hike.

We picked a beautiful Saturday in March to hit the trail. The sun was out with virtually no clouds in any direction. After navigating a few early forks in the path, we found the route through the woods that would ultimately lead to the point. As we gained elevation, the views of the river and surrounding mountains continued to improve. First Mt. St. Helens, and then Mt. Adams, became visible across the Columbia.

Indian Point
After two hours we reached a spur leading to a climbers trail. The steep path rapidly descended a few hundred feet down to a narrow ridge leading out to Indian Point. A dozen others were already there by the time we reached the edge and put down our packs for lunch. We soaked in the view, hiked out to the base of the point, and then climbed back up to the main path. From there we continued upward on a different trail that eventually flattened out and then descended in a loop back to a junction from earlier in the day.  As the trail began to descend, we decided to trail run the last several miles down to the car. It made for a quick journey to the trailhead, but our quads paid for it into the work week.

Looking east in the Gorge with Mt. Adams in the background
Overall, it was a great day on an excellent hike. The combination of weather, friends and scenery created an experience worthy of repeating. We capped it off by hitting the Cascade Locks Ale House for food and a pint before returning to Portland.

Click here for more photos from the day.

Monday, January 27, 2014

Indian Point - January 18, 2014

There are few bad hikes in the Columbia Gorge. Some hikes on the wrong day aren't perfect tens, such as when you encounter too many people on the trail, scramble through particularly gnarly weather or forget the trail whiskey in the car. But even on these days the hike is usually still a five or a six, especially when you're in good company.

Columbia Gorge with Mt. Adams in the background.
Then there are hikes that are so good that even on a bad day in the pissing January rain they can be nothing less than an eight or a nine. And on days when you catch them under perfect conditions, they break the scale at an eleven. Indian Point is one of these hikes (7.5 miles, 2,700 feet), and on January 18th it was nothing less than spectacular.

The day started in east Portland at the designated rendezvous point. Four of us piled into a single car, headed down I-84 and met a fifth team member at the Herman Creek trailhead just east of Cascade Locks. Although the temperature was in the thirties, conditions were nearly perfect - the morning fog had mostly burned off, giving rise to a bluebird sky. We quickly geared up and headed into the woods, stopping soon to shed a layer.

The early part of the trail system leading to Indian Point involves several forks in the road. Taking the wrong spur will lead to other adventures, but it won't bring you to the legendary promontory. We had to check the Sullivan guidebook more than once to confirm we were on the correct route. Confident in our pathfinding, we continued plodding up the trail at a steady pace. Some of the hikes in the Gorge - such as Dog Mountain - hit you hard and often. Indian Point is more forgiving. The hike contains a healthy 2,700 vertical feet of elevation gain, but it is evenly distributed.

Wind Mountain, Dog Mountain and others in the fog
After a few hours the trail crossed into a winter wonderland with a thin layer of frost and unmelted snow, and we reached a spur that descended a quarter mile down to the point. The words "epic," "amazing," and "bomber" are often overused (especially by me) when describing a kick-ass hike. But Indian Point on this day deserved an encyclopedia's worth of superlatives. As we down-climbed through the trees to the rocky outcropping, the combination of snow and frost on the trees, scattered fog patches across the river and unobstructed view of Mt. Adams brought about a synergy of awesome sauce. We lingered for a few minutes at the base of the point, soaked in the view and scarfed down a snack before retreating to a place more sheltered from the wind.

On this day, none of us decided to climb up Indian Point. Here's a video from 2012 when my friend Nate and I scrambled to the top.


Tip of Mt. Hood and the Herman Creek valley
Back on the main trail, we gained another few hundred feet of elevation before topping out in the woods on the Nick Eaton Ridge and descending down its backside. We found an ideal rest spot with a view of the tip of Mt. Hood and the Herman Creek valley. From there, the trail zig-zagged down the mountain for a few miles, skirting in and out of the woods before linking back up with the trail we started on earlier in the day and returning to the parking lot.

Lessons learned: always choose to go hiking in winter when the conditions are good (as opposed to staying home and watching sports); add Indian Point into the wheelhouse of Gorge hikes (it's as good as the Dog or Hamilton Mountain); and hiking with young kids can be fun (one of our team members rocked the trail at less than two years old - and did awesome).